The Independent Commission for Infrastructure (ICI) said Friday, Feb. 6, that it has submitted its summary report to President Marcos, detailing its "accomplishments and activities" for the past 125 days.
In a press statement, the body said it had "delivered substantial and measurable results" in just three months and with "constrained manpower and resources."
The ICI took pride in its own achievements amid widespread criticisms—from former and incumbent government officials across various sectors to activists and civilians—that it had not sent to jail "big fishes" in the anomalous flood control projects since its establishment in September 2025.
Its report covered its activities from Sept. 15, 2025, to Jan. 18, 2026.
Based on their report, the body's accomplishments are as follows:
- Nine referrals submitted to the Ombudsman, covering 64 individuals
- Coordination of one more referral, covering 66 individuals, to the Department of Justice
- The conduct of 32 total hearings, covering 36 witnesses, logging around 44 hours of proceedings
- Validation of findings through inspections of 16 sites in total
- Processing of 1,173 total related documents
- Freezing of 6,692 bank accounts and seizure or preservation of total P24.7 billions of assets
- Conduct of eight inter-agency coordination meetings
- Issuance of 146 formal letters and issuances, including 55 letters of data request, seven letters of recommendation, two letters requesting an Immigration Lookout Bulletin Order (ILBO) issuance, 76 Resolutions, and five memoranda of agreement or understanding with key partner institutions
According to the ICI, its submission of the 125-day report came "at a critical juncture for the Commission" as former Commissioners Rogelio "Babes" Singson and Rossana Fajardo resigned from their posts one after the other.